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Leo Humbert was an old man when he gave up his last secret, the one he had kept over all the years and even through all of the rather abrupt revelations about his life. Those had started the moment he was arrested in Denver on September 23, 1967 for the robbery of two state banks in Minnesota; Grey Eagle and Loretto. Both of those robberies had happened earlier in that same year and the arrest exposed a man who had successfully hidden a long and interesting criminal past from his wife of twenty-three years, their daughter and everyone else with whom they associated. They knew him as the simple, very successful and soft-spoken traveling salesman who lived with them on 39th Avenue Northeast in Saint Anthony, Minnesota, accompanying them to church at Victory Lutheran every Sunday. Leo was an average looking man, five foot nine and around one hundred and sixty pounds with thinning brown hair that formed a stark window’s peak on his pale forehead. His features were sharp, with his blue eyes piercing you when he was serious and lighting up when he laughed. He was diligent, kind and caring, although often absent due to his work and sometimes a little too distracted by newspapers. When he was home, his early morning walk down to the newsstand was mandatory, regardless of wind, rain, snow or any other inconvenience or obligation. He would return to the house to read them in detail at the kitchen table, drinking repeated cups of dark, thick coffee and nibbling on saltine crackers. That was about all they knew of him until the call he made from the Denver jail on September 25th, informing his wife Amanda that he needed to explain a few things.

He had not told her everything, supposing I think that his version would be the only one she might hear. That turned out not to be true at all, especially as the agents of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension did an excellent job of questioning her in detail about his life. Even though she had not known him until 1943 they seemed intent on figuring out if she happened to know about anything he may have done before that, and they had plenty of questions about what he had been up to since. Her answers had been simple and straight-forward; she knew nothing, could not imagine him doing anything like robbing a bank, and certainly did not think he had committed any other crimes. The investigators eventually left her alone but not before much more of her husband’s story had become obvious to Amanda.

Leo Humbert

Leo Humbert was born on March 7th, 1901 and managed to stay out of any significant trouble with the law for exactly twenty years and two hundred twenty-five days. His arrest on that morning, October 18, 1921, for an embezzlement scheme that netted him four years in prison, set off a long run of crime and punishment that occupied the next twenty-two years of his life. Along the way he stole cars, forged documents, trafficked in stolen goods and ultimately began robbing banks. His most notorious known robbery was of the Meire Grove bank, which he held up twice in the space of five weeks, along the way picking up an accomplice by the name of John Williams.

Humbert and Williams wanted poster

The two of them also managed an escape from the Stearns County jail and spent time on the run with a two hundred dollar bounty on their head. Eventually they were caught and Leo received a life sentence in 1929, which he began serving at Stillwater State Prison. Things went well enough for him there that he received parole in 1937 but he only made it a few months before being returned due to violations of his release. After that he stayed there until 1943, when he received another chance at parole and began the life with which Amanda thought she was familiar.

Humbert at parole 1943

He had kept his past a complete secret from her and she had been devastated by the revelations of the agents as well as what she started reading in the newspapers. Reporters, along with detailing the sordid details of Leo’s crimes, had dug up the fact that he had married a stripper from the Gay 90’s nightclub in downtown Minneapolis. That marriage had taken place in Albuquerque just the year before his arrest, on what Amanda had believed to be one of Leo’s business trips. This revelation had been enough for her, and she had taken her daughter and moved away into obscurity and sorrow. Those reporters had also managed to find an entry in the Who’s Who of Commerce and Industry that listed the high school drop-out and career criminal Leo Humbert as a doctoral graduate from Duke University and a retired Army colonel. That entry still remains a mystery.

His story is interesting of course, and certainly caught my attention for a few long hours of research one Sunday. It would have ended there except for the fact that I also turned up a journal entry from a guard at the Hennepin County Jail. Leo had been transported back to Minnesota by the US Marshal’s service after his arrest in Denver and he was housed in that county jail, awaiting a hearing on the bank robberies. This guard had been on duty the night of Sunday, October 22nd 1967, the night that Leo was reportedly found unresponsive in his cell. He would die that night, just a few hours later, and the official reporting has always referenced insulin shock as a possible cause of death. That seemed plausible as, although no medical history supported it, Leo had told Hennepin County officials during his admitting process to the jail that he was a diabetic. This guard’s journal entry seemed to tell a different story:

10/22/67

On duty today at jail – the usual for most of the shift. Around 7 pm I took my break and left Chaz (the new kid) at the gate. When I got back, he stated that a doctor had come to check on Humbert (a bankrobber brought in from Denver for a stick-up job in Grey Eagle). Stupid kid – no medical visits that late at night except for emergencies and there weren’t none of those. Went to check on the guy but it was too late – eyes were rolling back in his head. I got to him just before he passed out. He grabbed my collar and said something but I couldn’t hear it. He said it again – still not sure but I think it was ‘that hotel fire, 1940, murder, look up the clock-maker.’ Weird stuff – might have been 1914 he said but the rest I’m pretty sure about. Covered for the kid of course (he hadn’t even made the faker sign the book so wasn’t much to it). They’re saying it’s a diabetes thing – here’s hoping to that sticking.